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Transcript
SOME PLANS FOR A LOYALIST
STRONGHOLD IN THE MIDDLE COLONIES
BY GEORGE W. KYTE*
T HE William L. Clements Library at Ann Arbor, Michigan,
contains collections of manuscripts which are invaluable to
students of the War for American Independence. The Gage
Papers, the Shelburne Papers, and the papers of Sir Henry
Clinton are of particular importance to scholars who wish to
investigate the political and military events which took place in
America from 1775 to 1783. A study of the papers of Lord
George Germain, who was secretary of state for the colonies
from 1775 to 1782, is especially rewarding to the researcher in
many respects. For one thing, the contents of the papers reveal
to us some of the weaknesses in thinking and planning on the
part of Lord George which helped to make it possible for the
Americans to gain their independence. For another, an examination of the Germain Papers brings to our attention some interesting plans for the suppression of the revolutionary forces and for
the establishment of Loyalist strongholds in certain areas.
It is particularly interesting to students of the history of the
Middle Colonies to discover among the Germain Papers various
memoranda suggesting that the Philadelphia area, or the peninsula
of eastern Maryland, or the area between the Delaware and the
Potomac, should be reconquered and held as part of a Loyalist
armed camp in America. Some of the memorialists who drew up
plans for a stronghold in the Middle Colonies were prominent loyalists like Joseph Galloway, one-time friend of Benjamin Franklin. Others were people of humble circumstances, often junior officers in provincial (Loyalist) militia units. Whether prominent
or unknown, the men who dreamed of and schemed for the formation of a Loyalist citadel in the Middle Colonies were con*The author wishes to acknowledge his indebtedness to the Lehigh University Institute of Research for a generous grant of funds which has enabled
him to obtain photocopies of source materials in the Germain Papers at the
Clements Library.
177
178
PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY
vinced that their plans, if adopted, would prove to be perfectly
feasible. They believed that there was a very high proportion of
Tories in the population of the area under consideration, and
they counted on the possibility of raising ten thousand, twelve
thousand, or even as many as fifteen thousand men to form provincial militia units to defend the proposed strongholds. They may
have overestimated the number of men who would have been willing to rally to their standard, but the studies of a number of fine
scholars have confirmed their belief that there was a large proportion of Loyalists in the population of the Middle Colonies.'
At the beginning of the war in North America, Lord Germain
underestimated the strength and determination of the revolutionary forces. Because of his initial miscalculation, he was confident
of quick and easy victory. Even after two campaigns, his optimism
had not been blunted completely, for he expected final victory in
the campaign of 1777.2 His overconfidence was shared, during the
early years of the war, by a considerable number of his subordinates. Many British and Loyalist officers and leaders united in
predicting victory as soon as the Continental army could be
forced to fight a pitched battle. Their viewpoint was expressed
by one gentleman who wrote to Lord Germain that one good
"drubbing" of General Washington's army would bring the war
to an end.3 Another writer went so far as to assert that the war
could be won, without the use of any troops, by a tight naval
blockade and by the burning of a few seaports. 4
'Carlos E. Godfrey, "Muster Rolls of Three Troops of Loyalist Light
Dragoons raised in Pennsylvania, 1777-1778," Pennsylvania Magazine of
History and Biography, XXXIV (1910), 1-8; Harold Bell Hancock, The
Delaware Loyalists (Papers of the Historical Society of Delaware, New
Series, III, Wilmington, 1940), 76 p.; A. Van Doren Honeyman, "Concerning
the New Jersey Loyalists in the Revolution," Proceedingsof the New Jersey
Historical Society, LI (April, 1933), 117-133; E. Alfred Jones, The Loyalists
of New Jersey (Collections of the New Jersey Historical Society, X, Newark, 1927). 346 p.; Wilbur H. Siebert, The Loyalists of Pennsylvania (Ohio
State University Bulletin, XXIV, Contributions in History and Political Science, No. 5, Columbus, 1920), 117 p.; Cornelius C. Vermeule, "The Active
Loyalists of New Jersey," Proceedingsof the New Jersey Historical Society,
LII (April, 1934), 87-95.
2Lord George Germain to Lord Richard Howe, October 18, 1776, Sackville-Germain Papers, volume V. The papers are arranged in chronological
order in twenty-two large volumes and several supplementary volumes.
(Henceforth the Germain Papers will be designated by the letters G.P.)
Jonathan Boucher to Lord George Germain, November 27, 1775, G.P., IV.
Boucher was a clergyman who lived in Annapolis, Maryland.
'John McColme, broadside entitled "American Queries," December 1,
1775, G.P., IV.
PLANS FOR A LOYALIST STRONGHOLD
179
While thoughts of quick and easy victory were uppermost in
their minds, British authorities made little effort to raise any considerable forces of Loyalists. They had full confidence in the
ability of their regular troops to defeat the enemy's armies and
to pacify the countryside. They raised and equipped Loyalist
units only when they could do so without a very special effort.
They did not, however, take full advantage of the possibility of
obtaining the support of Tory manpower during the first three
campaigns of the war.5
British officers were not only negligent in utilizing Loyalist
manpower, but they were also guilty of mistakes, or carelessness,
which caused them to abandon some of the Loyalist units which
did rally to their standards. A few examples will suffice to illustrate the point. In 1775, British authorities in London promised
support to the Loyalists of North Carolina. 6 A fleet was sent to
North Carolina, with an army on board, but it was delayed for
some time in leaving the British Isles, and it failed to accomplish
anything when it reached Cape Fear in May, 1776. Meanwhile,
many Loyalists had taken the field, but they were suppressed with
heavy losses by the time the British fleet had arrived.7 After their
defeat, the North Carolinians who favored the King's cause were
reluctant to arise again unless a British army had landed, or
marched into, their province. Nevertheless, a number of desperate
men remained in the field and carried on a prolonged guerrilla
resistance.
Another instance of abandonment of Loyalist forces occurred
in the campaign of 1777. Some Loyalists accompanied General
John Burgoyne's army as it marched toward Albany in that year,
and others arose in the Mohawk Valley to rally to the British
standard. Support for the New York Tories collapsed, however,
when General Burgoyne's army was surrounded and captured. 8
The surrender of the British regulars at Saratoga left the Loyalists in a hopeless situation, and some of them were killed and cap'Oscar T. Barck, New York during the War for Independence (New
York, 1931), pp. 191-192, 195-196, 200.
' Robert 0. DeMond, The Loyalists in North Carolina during the Revolution (Durham, 1940), pp. 86-89.
'Ibid., pp. 92-96, 107.
H. Siebert, "The Dispersion of the American Tories," Mississippi
Valley Historical Review, I (September, 1914), 186.
8Wilbur
180
PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY
tured, while others fled to Canada, leaving their homes and property in the hands of the victorious Continentals.9
One of the most serious disasters suffered by Loyalists during
the course of the war was that which took place when the British
army evacuated Philadelphia in 1778. Many people in Philadelphia and in nearby counties in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and
Maryland had welcomed the British, or had joined forces with
them, when they had occupied the Quaker City in the previous
year. Naturally, the evacuation of the city was a tremendous disaster for the Tories who had welcomed and co-operated with the
British. They were forced to abandon their homes and property
in order to escape to New York before the re-occupation of Philadelphia by the Continentals. Some persons who were suspected
of being Loyalists (including a number of Quakers who had entertained British officers in their homes) remained behind to protect their property; a number of them were arrested and interned
in camps located in the interior of Virginia.' 0
Joseph Galloway, a prominent and well-to-do Loyalist, had
served as Sir William Howe's civil affairs administrator during
the British occupation of Philadelphia." He had been instrumental in furnishing British authorities with military, political,
and economic intelligence during the campaign of 1777 and the
occupation of the city. He had taken a census of the population
of the city and its suburbs, and had supervised the dis-arming
of all persons who were not active Loyalists." He had attempted
to promote various schemes for the arming of Loyalists in and
around Philadelphia; at one time, he had asserted that 10,000 Loy'The term "Continentals" is used throughout the paper to represent the
militia as well as the regular troops in the revolutionary forces. The term
"Americans" can't be used because the Loyalists were Americans, too. The
British called the revolutionary forces "Rebels," while some American historians have liked to refer to them as "Patriots," a term which seems a bit
stilted; besides, there was patriotism on both sides. Hence, to avoid the use
of the terms "Rebel" or "Patriot," it has seemed to the author to be wise to
refer to all the revolutionary forces as "Continentals."
'For an interesting discussion of some aspects of the position of the
Quakers during the American Revolution, read Robert P. Falk, "Thomas
Paine and the Attitude of the Quakers to the American Revolution," Pennsylvania Magai7ne of History and Biography, LXIII (July, 1939), 302-310.
uFor a brief biography, see Ernest H. Baldwin, "Joseph Galloway, the
Loyalist Politician," Pennsylvania Magasine of History and Biography,
XXVI (1902), 161-191; 289-321, 417-442.
"The Examination of Joseph Galloway, Esq.; . . . before the House of
Commons (London, 1779), p. 24.
PLANS FOR A LOYALIST STRONGHOLD
181
alist militia could be raised in Philadelphia and in some twentytwo counties in nearby portions of Pennsylvania, New Jersey,
Maryland, and Delaware."3 Whether his Loyalist friends could
have raised that many men for service in provincial militia units
poses a question which cannot be answered. Galloway may have
overestimated the number and determination of his followers. At
all events, his proposal was made in good faith, and it is possible
that he and his friends could have raised 10,000 fighting men if
Generals Howe and Clinton had given them support in terms of
arms, ammunition, equipment, and official encouragement of their
plans.
To the bitter disappointment of Joseph Galloway and his
friends, the commanders of the British army made no real effort to arm the Loyalists of the Middle Colonies during the occupation of Philadelphia. Galloway complained that they had
not even made a serious effort to raise and arm the Loyalists of
the Quaker City itself (although he conceded that many of the
young men of Philadelphia were pacifists who would not bear
arms or participate in military activities in any case) .4 He complained further that the British had issued "protections" to New
Jersey and Philadelphia Loyalists, but that the possession of such
documents had not prevented British and Hessian soldiers from
plundering their homes and confiscating their property.' 5 His testimony concerning the failure of British officers to protect or utilize the Loyalists of the Middle Colonies is damning, but allowance
must be made because of his animosity toward Sir William Howe
whose military abilities he considered to be contemptible.
The hopes and plans of Galloway and his friends suffered a
death blow when Sir Henry Clinton decided to evacuate Philadelphia. Galloway advised against the evacuation, but Sir Henry,
who had to make the final decision, came to the conclusion that
it was necessary for him to abandon the Quaker City. Lord George
Germain had authorized him to take such a step, if it seemed necessary, but had urged him to retain Philadelphia as long as he
had sufficient troops to do so without weakening his field force
"Joseph Galloway, "Proposal for covering and reducing the Country as
the British Army shall pass through it," in Benjamin F. Stevens's Facsimiles
of Manuscripts in European Archives Relating to America, 1773-1783 (24
vols., London, 1889-95), XXIV, no. 2097. See also no. 2096 in ibid.
14 The Examination of Joseph Galloway, pp. 24, 32.
Ibid., pp. 43-45.
182
PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY
or his garrisons elsewhere.' 6 Germain had explained to Sir Henry
that the entry of France and the possible entry of Spain into the
war had altered the military situation markedly. Large numbers
of troops who might otherwise have been available for service
with General Clinton's army would be required for garrison duty
in Canada, Nova Scotia, and the West Indies. Under the circumstances, offensive operations in North America would have
to be curtailed in order to secure the defenses of New York,
Halifax, and other fortified bases.
After considering the military situation very carefully, General Clinton had decided to evacuate Philadelphia in order to concentrate his forces at New York. Accordingly, he carried out the
retreat which brought so much misfortune upon his Loyalist followers. His plans for an offensive to capture Savannah and
Charleston were hampered by the operations of a French fleet and
an Anglo-American army which threatened to capture the garrison
of Newport, Rhode Island.17 Admiral Lord Richard Howe finally
succeeded in rescuing the Newport garrison, but not until the
British had faced a situation which gave them something of a
preview of the disaster which was later to overtake one of their
armies at Yorktown. The Newport operations prevented the
prompt execution of the offensive operations which were supposed to smash resistance in the Southern Colonies. Savannah
was captured by British forces in December, 1778, but the surrender of Charleston did not take place until May, 1780.
The suffering which was caused among the Loyalists by the
evacuation of Philadelphia was not soon forgotten. They became
very cautious in their actions, and, even after the arrival of a
British army in a particular province, there was reluctance among
the local Tories to rally to the King's standard. They feared, of
course, that the army might march away again, abandoning them
to the mercy of their most bitter enemies. Thus, when Lord Charles
Cornwallis attempted to raise the Loyalists of North Carolina to
support him in 1781, he complained of their caution and lack of
enthusiasm. He reported to Sir Henry Clinton that, after his victory at Guildford, on March 15, 1781, the Loyalists in the vicinity
"Germain to Clinton, "most secret" instructions, March 8, 1778, G.P., VII;
a copy of the instructions appears in Stevens's Facsimiles, XI, no. 1062.
'XWilliam B. Willcox, "British Strategy in America, 1778," Journal of
Modern History, XIX (June, 1947), 97-121.
PLANS FOR A LOYALIST STRONGHOLD
183
did no more than ride into camp to congratulate him upon his victory.18 After that, they rode back home again! Lord Cornwallis
thought they were cowards, but they had arisen in force in 1776
and 1780, only to be crushed by superior force in a series of savage and bloody skirmishes.
The temporary loss of initiative by the British forces in North
America was due mainly to French participation in the war. The
escape of the French Mediterranean fleet into the Atlantic in 1778
created immense difficulties and dangers for the British until such
time as they could overtake and destroy it. Meanwhile, British
leaders were forced to re-evaluate their plans for the prosecution
of the war. They began to consider the idea of a piecemeal reconquest of the colonies. Certain colonies appeared to be almost totally
"disaffected," but there were others which were known to be inhabited by many Loyalists. Maryland, New Jersey, Delaware, and
parts of Pennsylvania and New York were included in the latter
category. It seemed reasonable to suppose that some of the abovementioned colonies, together with Georgia and the Carolinas, could
be reconquered one by one, with the help of the local Tories. As
we have already seen, one of the reasons which caused General
Clinton to evacuate Philadelphia was the need to disengage his
field forces in order to be able to send them to reconquer Georgia
and the Carolinas.
Loyal Americans, including Joseph Galloway, were strongly
convinced of the feasibility of winning at least partial victory in
North America through piecemeal reconquest. Galloway favored
immediate reconquest of the Middle Colonies, however, while British planners gave top priority to the restoration of the "King's
peace" in the South. 1 9 Had Galloway's recommendations been followed, it is probable that the Middle Colonies, and especially the
Philadelphia area, would have suffered from several years of
bloody civil war. As it turned out, however, the Middle Colonies
were spared from becoming a battleground after 1778, while the
soil of Virginia and the Carolinas was destined to become the
scene of desperate fighting in 1780 and 1781.
"Cornwallisto Clinton, April 10, 1781, Cornwallis Papers, G.D. 11, bundle
5, in Public Record Office. See also Sir Henry Clinton, Observations oil
Somne Parts of the Answers of Earl Cornwallis to Sir Henry Clinton's
Narrative (London, 1783), pp. 9-10.
"Germain to Clinton, March 8, 1778, G.P., VII.
184
PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY
Projects for the re-establishment of loyal provinces in North
America had been submitted to the British ministry as early as
October, 1775. One of many such projects called for the reconquest of the Penobscot region, where a buffer colony could be
maintained to defend Nova Scotia. 20 A somewhat similar plan
called for the re-establishment of royal authority in Georgia and
the Carolinas. 21 One scheme provided for the establishment of a
Loyalist citadel, to be defended by frontiersmen of Scottish extraction, in the vicinity of Lake Champlain. 2 2 Scores of similar
plans were submitted to British officials at one time or another,
and a large proportion of them were concerned with the founding
of Loyalist strongholds in the Middle Colonies.
One interesting proposal called for the withdrawal of the British armies, save only for garrisons which were to be maintained
in small but powerful fortresses located on islands and peninsulas
near every important seaport; the island-fortresses were to be
used as bases for warships which were to maintain, for years, if
necessary, a tight blockade of the coastline between Nova Scotia
and Florida. 2 2 Another plan, somewhat similar in purpose, proposed that the colonists should be deprived of the rights of British
citizens and that commerce with them should be prohibited or
strictly limited for a period of several years. 2 4 Evidently, the authors of both plans hoped that the colonists would eventually find
blockade or boycott to be economically intolerable, and would,
therefore, voluntarily apply for readmission into the imperial connection with Great Britain.
Lord George Germain, on the other hand, was disinclined to
believe in the possibility of winning the war through blockade
or boycott. He felt that vigorous military measures would be necessary. However, in a memorandum which he wrote in January,
1779, he expressed pessimism because of the lack of troops available to prosecute the war in North America. 2 5 He explained that
' Anonymous, "Remarks on the Eastern Country of New England," March
1, 1780, G.P., XII.
' Anonymous, "Reasons humbly suggested to show . . . that the Kings
Forces should take possession of either Charles Town or Savannah. . ." [early
1778?], G.P., II, Supplementary.
Anonymous to Germain [early 1776?], G.P., I, Supplementary.
'Walter Patterson to [Germain?], [1778?], G.P., VIII.
SJames Ramsey to [Germain?], [1778?], ibid.
"' Germain to Lord North, January 11, 1779, G.P., IX.
PLANS FOR A LOYALIST STRONGHOLD
185
it would be impossible to send a sufficient number of reinforcements to North America because of commitments in the West
Indies and elsewhere. He complained about the uncertainty raised
by the presence of French warships in American waters; so long
as they remained there the British naval blockade could be broken
periodically, and operations on land would be jeopardized by the
possibility of a joint Franco-American attack similar to that
which had been made at Newport in 1778. Finally, he speculated
upon the possibility of cutting the enemy's lines of communications by occupying, with Loyalist help, the area lying between the
Hudson and Connecticut rivers.2 6 He evidently expected that such
a move would embarrass the Continentals considerably, although
he did not delude himself into thinking that the proposed operations would bring about decisive results.
Two months after Lord George had drawn up his project for
a campaign along the Hudson, Joseph Galloway submitted to him
a carefully worked out "Plan for Establishing a permanent Union between Great Britain and America." 2 7 His "Plan" has already been the subject of careful and scholarly investigation; it
would be futile for us to describe it in detail when the reader can
so easily turn to the pages of Julian Boyd's fine book, AngloAmerican Union: Joseph Galloway's Plans to Preserve the British Empire, I774-1788.28 Galloway insisted that the revolutionary
forces were war-weary, and that they were disposed to listen to
reasonable terms. He proposed that Parliament should promise
them a restoration of civil government, a constitution in which
their civil liberties would be clearly stated, and a parliament of
their own or representation in that of Great Britain. He seemed
to think that the colonies could be reconquered one by one, with
the help of Loyalists, and he believed that reconquest would be
followed by a peace settlement if only such terms as he had proposed were offered to the Americans.
Another plan, proposed by one of Galloway's acquaintances,
was so sound, and so well thought out, that it might have spelled
victory for the British if it had been made available to them early
26Ibid.
'Galloway to [Germain], March 18, 1779, G.P., IX, and enclosed "Plans
,"' ibid., III, Supplementary.
Galloway's projects of March 18, 1779, are carefully analyzed in Julian
Boyd, op. cit., pp. 84-94.
.
186
PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY
in the war. It advised them to operate in force in the Chesapeake,
using their naval power to support a series of amphibious attacks
in Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania. 2 9 A field force of 12,000
picked men was to liberate the Loyalists in the above-mentioned
provinces and in the Jersies. The best fighting men among the
Loyalists were then to be armed and equipped, to the number of
8,000, and were to be relied upon to defend the reconquered area.
Reinforcements were to be brought to the fighting front by sea,
in order to maintain the offensive army at a constant strength of
12,000 men. The army was to live off the land, in order to reduce
its baggage train, and was to carry only light artillery with it, so
that it could obtain a maximum of mobility. It was to pursue General Washington's army relentlessly, in order to bring it to battle
or to wear it down by harassing it. As soon as the Continentals
had been driven from the Middle Colonies, assistance was to be
given to the Loyalists in New York until they, in their turn, had
been liberated and had raised 8,000 militiamen for local defense.
Virginia and the Carolinas were to be conquered and held in the
same manner. Finally, since there were thought to be very few
"well-affected" people in New England, it was proposed that the
colonies which retained the hardest core of resistance should be
stormed and laid waste with fire and sword. Civil government was
not to be restored in New England for a period of years; instead,
an example was to be made of the disaffected provinces, and they
were to be subjected to military government "with a rod of iron"
for several years. 3 0
Of all the plans for reconquest which were submitted to General Clinton and Lord Germain, the one outlined above was probably the most feasible. Unfortunately for the British cause, it was
submitted in 1780, when French and Spanish participation in the
war threatened British naval supremacy and made it necessary
for the government at London to divert to the West Indies and
Gibraltar reinforcements which were badly needed in North America. Had the plan been available to the Howe brothers in 17761777, however, it might have enabled them to win the war.
3J[ohn] Smyth, "Sketch of a System by which the rebellious Colonies in
America might be reduced to Obedience in two Campaigns," dated March 8,
1780, G.P., XII. Smyth was a Loyalist refugee who was residing in London.
He submitted a copy of his "System" to Joseph Galloway as well as one to
Lord Germain.
30 Ibid.
PLANS FOR A LOYALIST STRONGHOLD
187
Whether it could have succeeded had it been attempted will never
be known, but one wonders if the Continental forces could have
held out for long against the tactics described above.
A number of plans similar to but less well thought out than the
one just discussed were submitted to British authorities during
the course of the war. They called for the reconquest of the
Middle Colonies, with the aid of Loyalist militia, and they relied
upon the Loyalists to maintain order in the reconquered areas
while the British regulars pursued General Washington's army.
Some of the plans were quite sound and might have worked had
they been submitted early in the war, and if, of course, the British authorities had accepted them. One of the plans, submitted in
1781 by a New York Loyalist, estimated that there were 15,000
men in New York and in the Jersies who would be willing to bear
arms as soon as the British army had driven the Continentals
from the area in which they lived. The author proposed that the
British army should march into the area in question, and should
arm and equip the Loyalists, who would then disarm their disaffected neighbors, cut the line of communications between the
enemy's forces in New England and the Southern Colonies, and
make destructive raids on towns and settlements held by the
enemy.A' The plan contained the rather melodramatic suggestion
that the Loyalists would be willing to put the torch to their own
homes and fields, if necessary, in order to deprive the Continentals
of provisions in such parts of the New York-New Jersey area
as they might succeed in occupying. The whole scheme sounds a
bit fantastic, but things even more fantastic have taken place in
wartime in very recent years.
Another plan, which was submitted to British authorities in 1779
or 1780, called for an expedition to reconquer the peninsula or
"Eastern Shore" of Maryland. 2 The writer claimed that the
troops who were to conquer the Maryland peninsula would be
able to obtain an ample supply of provisions upon the spot. He
also claimed that the population of the peninsula was made up
almost entirely of Loyalists, and that there was room enough and
food enough in the area to enable large numbers of Loyalists from
3
C. N. Godfrey Jadus, "Intelligence from an American Gentleman from
New York," January 16, 1781. G.P., XIV.
"Anonymous to [Germain?], "Remarks on the Peninsula or Eastern Shore
of Maryland" [1779 or 1780?], G.P., XVII.
188
PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY
surrounding colonies to settle there. The peninsula could be defended quite easily by a few thousand troops and militia, and naval
forces operating from its harbors and inlets could harass and
blockade Philadelphia, Baltimore, and other ports on the Chesapeake. The Continentals, if they remained in the Middle Colonies,
would be cut off from foreign supplies, and would be subject to
the danger of utter destruction if the British army should make
a sudden amphibious attack followed by a rapid inland march.
Sooner or later, the Continentals would suffer defeat, or be forced
to retreat, and then the Middle Colonies could be pacified, civil
governments could be restored, and large forces of militia could
be raised to maintain order throughout the reconquered area.
One Major Charles Cochrane submitted to his superiors, some
time in late 1780, a project for the reconquest of the colonies south
of the Delaware River.3 3 He advocated the bold step of evacuating
New York and of concentrating all British forces in bases which
were to be seized along the coasts of Maryland, Virginia, and the
Carolinas. The Loyalists in these provinces were then to be raised
and armed, and operations were to proceed until the colonies south
of the Delaware had been reconquered piecemeal. Meanwhile, the
enemy was to be denied the use of New York harbor by a force
of 600 picked men who were to be posted in a powerful fortress
which was to be established on Sandy Hook. Once the pacification
of the colonies south of the Delaware had been completed, a force
of 15,000 men was to hold the line of the Delaware against all
comers. Loyalist militia were to maintain order in the reconquered
provinces, while the field force was to harass the enemy by making a series of forays to the northward. Such Loyalists as should
come from the northern provinces were to be allowed to settle on
confiscated estates in the Southern and Middle Colonies. Disaffected members of the population were to be forced to emigrate
to the territories still held by the Continentals, except that men
of military age who might take arms with the Continental forces
were to be imprisoned. Head of Elk in Maryland, a post on the
James River in Virginia, Beaufort in North Carolina, and Charles' Major Charles Cochrane to [Sir Henry Clinton?], "Thoughts relative
to the present State of our Affairs in America with remarks on the advantages which may be derived to Great Britain, from giving up the Northern
Colonies and drawing the line of our present possessions by the River Delaware" [December, 1780?], G.P., II, Supplementary.
PLANS FOR A LOYALIST STRONGHOLD
189
ton in South Carolina, were to be the principal British bases for
the reconquest of the provinces south of the Delaware.34 Each
base was to be fortified as soon as possible after its capture in
order to provide the reconquered and pacified provinces with a
number of permanent defense posts from which they could be
administered.
Fortunately for the Continentals, some of the most feasible of
the plans of reconquest discussed above were never put into operation. Perhaps they would not have succeeded. Perhaps they were
based upon a gross over-estimate of the number of Loyalists who
would have been willing to bear arms in order to assist in maintaining order in certain areas. At all events, the most feasible of
the projects for reconquest were not tried, or else they were tried
after the French had entered the war. Methodical reconquest, with
the aid of local Loyalists, might have succeeded in 1776-77. It was
much less likely to have succeeded after 1778, when a French fleet
had appeared ofT the coast of North America. Until that fleet
could be destroyed, all British operations in North America were
in constant danger of being interrupted or countered by FrancoAmerican joint action. In addition to the threat from the French
fleet, the British cause was further weakened by demoralization
among American Loyalists. The Loyalists never forgot the evacuation of Philadelphia in 1778. Nevertheless, there were still many
men in the various colonies who were willing to arise in favor of
the British when opportunity to do so presented itself.
The British could have taken advantage of the presence of numerous Loyalists in the Middle Colonies to launch a major offensive in that area. However, they turned their backs upon various
plans of reconquest of the Middle Colonies in order to retake the
South. A preliminary blow was struck in December, 1778, when
Savannah, Georgia, was captured by British forces. The main
blow fell in May, 1780, when General Clinton himself led the
British army which captured Charleston, South Carolina. 3 5 General Clinton then returned to his headquarters at New York, while
Lord Charles Cornwallis pursued the remnants of the Continental
forces. From South Carolina, he pressed on and on, until he had
marched through North Carolina into a deadly trap at Yorktown,
Ibid.
3sAdmiral Marriot Arbuthnot to Germain, May 2, 1780, and Sir Henry
Clinton to Germain, June 4, 1780, both in G.P., XII.
'r
190
PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY
Virginia. He had won pyrrhic victories and had achieved hollow
conquests, but the whole structure of his achievements, real or
imaginary, came to a painful end when he was forced to surrender
his entire army to the Franco-American combined forces, in October, 1781.36 During the course of the fighting, large parts of
the Carolinas and Virginia were devastated by the rival armies
and by the civil war between Loyalist and revolutionary militia
forces. Even South Carolina, which had appeared to be pacified
by the British in 1780, suffered from civil strife in 1781.
The people of the Middle Colonies were fortunate to have been
spared the horrors and the destructiveness of the closing campaigns of the War for American Independence. They would have
suffered, as the North Carolinians had suffered in 1781, if British statesmen and generals had accepted the plans of Joseph Galloway and his friends who had advocated a major effort to reconquer all or part of Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and
Delaware. Perhaps, if Lord Cornwallis had not been forced to
surrender at Yorktown, the campaign of 1782 would have taken
place in the vicinity of Baltimore and Philadelphia. As it happened, however, the loss of a British army in the campaign of
1781 brought the fighting in North America to a close. The Middle
colonies were spared from further bloodshed and the Loyalists who
might have played a major part in the fighting were soon forced to
turn to the constructive task of settling various parts of Nova
Scotia, New Brunswick, and Upper Canada (now Ontario).3 7
' See William B. Willcox, "The British Road to Yorktown: A Study in
Divided Command," American Historical Review, LII (October, 1946), 1-35.
3' It is not our purpose to list any of the vast body of literature concerning
the settlement of the Loyalists in Canada. There is, however, one general
account of the resettlement of the Loyalists which deserves special mention
here: Wilbur H. Siebert, "The Dispersion of the American Tories," Mississippi Valley Historical Review, I (September, 1914), 185-197.